October 18, 2024, presidential campaign news | CNN Politics

October 18, 2024, presidential campaign news

<p>Both U.S. presidential candidates will hold multiple events in Michigan, one of the battlegroud states. Kevin Liptak explains why Trump and Harris are crisscrossing the state.</p>
Trump and Harris both campaign in Michigan today. Here's why the state is key
03:02 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

• Harris and Trump campaign in Michigan: Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump were in the battleground state Friday. Harris pledged to invest in manufacturing communities and work with union members in Grand Rapids. Trump spoke at a rally in Detroit and said the city “has such great potential,” a week after insulting it.

• Early voting: With Election Day just 18 days away, more than 11 million Americans have already voted, according to data from 42 states gathered by CNN, Edison Research, and Catalist. California leads with more than 1.5 million ballots cast, followed by Georgia with more than 1.1 million ballots.

• New files from Trump probe: Special counsel Jack Smith on Friday released new evidence in his 2020 election subversion criminal case against Trump, including a transcript of the moment he was handed a Diet Coke to watch the Jan. 6 Capitol riot on TV.

Voting resources: Read CNN’s voter handbook to see how to vote in your area, and read up on the 2024 candidates and their proposals on key issues. Send us your questions about the election here.

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Sen. Baldwin and Hovde spar over abortion and ethics in Wisconsin debate

Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin of Wisconsin and Republican challenger Eric Hovde faced off in their only debate on Friday evening, each painting the other as out of touch with state voters.

Baldwin emphatically stated a “woman’s rights and freedoms should not depend upon her zip code or state,” noting how abortion care is only accessible in three of Wisconsin’s 72 counties, thanks to the state’s 1849 abortion law.

Hovde, a businessman, said the issue of abortion should be left to states to resolve with a “common sense and compassionate approach,” adding that he supports exceptions in circumstances of rape, incest and health of the mother.

He accused Baldwin of pushing to allow abortion “up to the point of delivery,”asking the senator, “what month would you stop? Is it the eighth month? Is it the ninth month?”

Baldwin fired back: “Eric Hovde that does not happen in America. And it’s very clear that he has never read Roe v. Wade.”

Hovde, who has spent a lot of his personal wealth on his campaign, extended the argument to take aim at Baldwin for her partner’s investing portfolio.

“Eric Hovde should stay out of my personal life,” Baldwin responded. “I think I speak for most Wisconsin women that he should stay out of all of our personal lives.”

Trump says Detroit is a "sacred place," a week after insulting city

Former President Donald Trump, who last week warned the country would end up “like Detroit” if Vice President Kamala Harris is elected, called the city a “sacred place” and said he thought it had “great potential” during a rally there Friday.

Trump said, “I am proclaiming to the people of this state that by the end of my term, the entire world will be talking about the Michigan miracle and the stunning rebirth of Detroit.”

“We’re going to make Detroit great again. We’re going to make it great again. You know, they have been talking about it for years and years and years. For generations, this city and state were the world capital of automotive production and one of the great manufacturing centers in all of history,” he said.

The former president also made a pitch to the Detroit audience to vote early.

Obama warns about an "older, loonier Donald Trump" at campaign rally in Arizona

Former US President Barack Obama walks on stage during a Get-Out-The-Vote campaign rally for US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris in Tucson, Arizona, on October 18.

Hitting the trail for Vice President Kamala Harris in Arizona, former President Barack Obama on Friday questioned former President Donald Trump’s competence, arguing that America doesn’t need to see what an “older, loonier Donald Trump looks like with no guardrails.”

Obama also questioned Trump’s competence while poking fun at his Oaks, Pennsylvania, town hall earlier this week, when Trump stayed on stage and swayed to music that played for more than 30 minutes after it ended.

“Along with his intentions, there is also a question of his competence. Have you seen him lately? I mean, he is out there, he’s giving two, two-and-a-half hour speeches, just word salads. You have no idea what he’s talking about. He’s talking about Hannibal Lector, he’s talking about this, he’s talking about that,” Obama said.

Campaigning in the border state, Obama, again, criticized Trump’s scapegoating of immigrants, his proposal for mass deportations to solve America’s issues, and questioned, “Why didn’t he actually solve the problem when he was in power?”

He praised late Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona — his former GOP rival in the 2008 election — as “a man of character” and for understanding that “some values transcend party.”

McCain “believed in honest argument and hearing the views of other people. He didn’t demonize his political opponents,” Obama said.

US Senate nominee Ruben Gallego, Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly of Arizona and his wife former US Rep. Gabby Giffords, and US congressional candidate Kirsten Engel spoke ahead of the former president.

Harris acknowledges "very difficult" year for Arab-Americans in Michigan rally

US Vice President and Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event in Waterford Township, Michigan, on October 18.

Vice President Kamala Harris acknowledged the “very difficult” year for members of the Arab-American community in the Detroit area during a rally in Michigan on Friday while reiterating her commitment to working to bring an end to the Israel-Hamas war.

At a rally in Waterford Township, Michigan, Harris touted the support of “Arab-American leaders” like Wayne County Deputy Executive Assad Turfe, but recognized that the Israel’s military campaign in Gaza and in Lebanon have troubled members of the sizable Arab-American and Muslim community, which she said has “deep and proud roots in the Detroit metro area.”

Harris reiterated her belief that the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar could create an opportunity to renew negotiations for a ceasefire and hostage release deal between Israel and Hamas. She also said she believes “diplomacy” can resolve the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hezbollah.

Harris’ remarks come during her first swing through Michigan since the Israeli military confirmed on Thursday Sinwar was killed by Israel Defense Forces on Wednesday.

Trump's Detroit rally resumes after pause due to audio issues

Donald Trump waits after the sound system stopped working during a rally in Detroit, Michigan, on October 18.

Former President Donald Trump was forced to pause his rally Friday for more than 15 minutes because his microphone stopped working mid-sentence. Trump paced around the stage as he waited for the issue to get resolved.

Once the audio was restored, Trump told the crowd he won’t pay the bill from the “stupid company that rented us this crap.”

The headline and post have been updated with the resumption of Trump’s rally.

More than 11 million pre-election ballots cast with California leading the way

More than 11 million Americans have already voted in this year’s election, with 18 days to go until Election Day.

That’s according to data from 42 states gathered by CNN, Edison Research, and Catalist, a company that provides data, analytics and other services to Democrats, academics and nonprofit advocacy groups, including insights into who is voting before November.

California leads the way with more than 1.5 million ballots cast, followed by Georgia with more than 1.1 million ballots. More than 900,000 ballots have been cast in each of Florida, Michigan and Virginia.

Trump says there are “very, very few” police officers who are “bad apples”

Republican presidential nominee and former US President Donald Trump, attends a roundtable discussion with community members in Auburn Hills, Michigan, on October 18.

Former President Donald Trump said he thought there are “very, very few” police officers who are “bad apples,” as he reiterated his intention to seek the death penalty for anyone who kills a law enforcement official if reelected.

Trump had previously said if reelected, he would “impose the death penalty for anyone killing our police, sheriffs, border patrol, ICE or law enforcement officials. The death penalty with a quicker trial.”

“You’re always going to have some bad apples, but they are very, very few,” Trump said.

Harris plays video of Trump's past anti-labor comments at Lansing event

Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event in Lansing, Michigan, on October 18.

In an attempt to draw a contrast between herself and former President Donald Trump when it comes to their commitment to union members and working-class voters, Vice President Kamala Harris played clips showing Trump disparaging the labor of auto workers, attacking United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain, and saying he “used to hate to pay overtime” when he oversaw his companies prior to entering politics.

Harris spoke to union members at a campaign stop in Lansing, Michigan, where she laid out her proposal to increase manufacturing jobs in America and protect worker benefits while portraying Trump as “no friend of labor.” Midway through her speech, she queued up a video of past statements from Trump cut together, including him saying “we could have our child” do the work of automobile assembly workers, suggesting he would say to striking workers: “That’s OK, you’re all gone,” and telling supporters UAW President Shawn Fain “should be fired immediately.”

“Listen to his words,” Harris said after the 35-second video played for the audience.

“He’s got his club, and I’m going to tell you, union workers are not part of his club,” she said.

Harris reiterated her criticism of Ohio Sen. JD Vance for refusing to commit to maintaining federal funding approved by the Biden administration to convert the General Motors Grand River Assembly Plant in Lansing into an electric vehicle plant. She also attacked Vance for downplaying the jobs protected by that funding as “table scraps.”

The crowd of union members and Michigan supporters responded particularly strongly to a frequent line in Harris’ speech, in which she refers to Trump as “one of the biggest losers of manufacturing jobs in American history.” The crowd matched Harris’ cadence as she emphasized “losers,” prompting applause and cheers from the crowd as Harris smiled and continued her remarks.

Judge appears skeptical of GOP lawsuit challenging Pennsylvania process for overseas ballots

A federal judge in Pennsylvania on Friday had tough questions for the attorney representing several Republican members of Congress who have filed a lawsuit challenging the way the battleground state vets overseas ballots.

While the judge did not issue a decision at Friday’s hearing, his line of questioning suggested he was skeptical of the lawsuit’s merit.

The judge also pressed the attorney for the House GOP lawmakers on why they waited until so close to the 2024 election before seeking a court order that would segregate the overseas ballots for further verification — particularly since the same procedures have been in place for years.

The lawmakers, including Reps. Mike Kelly and Scott Perry, sued in federal court over how Pennsylvania election officials are processing the applications from overseas citizens — claiming the current procedures create a significant risk of unverified votes being counted.

The dispute is the latest in a flurry of lawsuits focused on overseas ballots — which have long been seen as sacrosanct by both parties, due to their connection to US military members serving in foreign countries.

Overseas ballots have become very favorable for Democrats and could be crucial in getting Vice President Kamala Harris over the finish line.

Attorneys representing Pennsylvania Secretary of State Al Schmidt, the defendant, were more blunt in their criticism of the lawsuit, saying there is no evidence that the ballots aren’t being properly verified.

Harris declines to say how she will diverge from Biden

Kamala Harris speaks at a campaign event in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on October 18.

Vice President Kamala Harris declined to say how she would diverge from President Joe Biden’s policies, saying Friday that publicly disagreeing with her former running mate would be a break from tradition and unproductive to their relationship.

“In terms of the tradition of it and also just going forward, it does not make for a productive and important relationship,” she said.

The exchange underscored the fine line she is walking between casting herself as a change candidate while maintaining loyalty to the president.

Those comments come after Biden told supporters in battleground Pennsylvania earlier this week that “every president has to cut their own path.”

The vice president added Friday that she would “bring my own experiences and my own life experiences” to the office. Pressed to identify a specific policy, pointed to home health care and Medicare after caring for her ailing mother, as well as housing affordability and down payment assistance.

Some more context: Harris has come under some scrutiny for a recent appearance on ABC’s “The View,” in which she could not identify anything she would have done differently over the last four years, aside from appointing a Republican to her Cabinet.

Trump makes unannounced stop at campaign office in Hamtramck, Michigan, with mayor

Former President Donald Trump on Friday made an unannounced stop at a campaign office in Hamtramck, Michigan, before he was slated to hold a campaign rally in Detroit.

Trump stood with the mayor of Hamtramck, Amer Ghalib, who recently endorsed Trump. Hamtramck has a large Muslim and Arab American population.

At one point, the mayor asked Trump: “One thing that the Democrats keep sending to our community to scare them (is) that you will come and deport them, although some of them are second and third-generation immigrants. So I want you to respond to these accusations and hear delivering to our community. What would you say to them?

“Fake news,” Trump responded.

Trump has vowed to conduct mass deportations of undocumented immigrants if reelected.

Harris and Walz will visit churches to encourage early voting among Black voters

Kamala Harris and Tim Walz arrive at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport in Savannah, Georgia,  on August 28.

Vice President Kamala Harris and Gov. Tim Walz will hit the campaign trail in key battleground states on Sunday in a push to mobilize Black voters to vote early, according to the campaign.

Harris will attend a church service at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church in Atlanta, Georgia, before going to a “Souls to the Polls” event. The vice president will also participate in a sit-down interview with Rev. Al Sharpton which will air on MSNBC at 5 p.m. on Sunday.

Walz is set to attend a church service at Victorious Believers Ministries in Saginaw, Michigan.

As part of the campaign’s latest Black voter outreach, “Souls to the Polls” was launched last Sunday with a national call featuring gospel performances, national and state faith leaders, senior elected officials and surrogates. The effort is led by a National Advisory Board of Black Faith Leaders who will crisscross across key swing states as an all-hands-on-deck effort.

Member of the Congressional Black Caucus will also campaign across battleground states to urge the key voting bloc to vote ahead of Election Day.

Democratic governors join rally for Harris in Grand Rapids

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was joined on stage by five Democratic governors ahead of Vice President Kamala Harris’ rally in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on Friday.

Whitmer appeared with New York Gov. Kathy Hochul, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers and Massachusetts Gov. Maura Healey.

She argued that Harris is the candidate who cares about Americans and will “work hard to make sure that all of our states are better places to live, work and invest.”

The appearance comes as Blue Wall governors — Whitmer, Evers and Shapiro — this past week launched a bus tour to highlight Harris’ policies to midwestern voters in the final weeks of the campaign and draw a contrast with former President Donald Trump ahead of Election Day.

Whitmer launched a six-figure ad buy in her state slamming Trump over his remarks casting doubt on Detroit’s revival and arguing that the former president lost jobs for the state.

Remember: Last week, Trump said at the Detroit Economic that “our whole country will end up being like Detroit if (Kamala Harris is) your president,” and compared the city, which is celebrating a comeback after an economic crash, to a developing nation.

Trump says he’s in a "very contentious fight” when asked about disclosing medical records

Former President Donald Trump said he was “in the middle of a very big and very contentious fight” when asked about whether he would disclose his medical records.

In Detroit, Michigan, a reporter asked Trump: “Will you release your health records?”

Trump has not released his actual medical records, and memos about his health in the past have often used hyperbolic language.

Trump again called on Harris to do a cognitive exam and release the results and said, “she wasn’t born smart.” Trump has repeatedly insulted Harris’ intelligence.

The Harris campaign is planning additional appearance with Liz Cheney, source says

Vice President Kamala Harris, right, and former Congresswoman Liz Cheney greet attendees during a campaign event at Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin, on Thursday, October 3.

Harris campaign officials are planning a fireside chat or town hall with Vice President Kamala Harris and former Republican Rep. Liz Cheney as part of a continued push to reach disaffected Republicans in the closing weeks of the election, according to a source familiar with discussions.

The Harris campaign has been doubling down on outreach to GOP voters in battleground states who they believe are turned off by former President Donald Trump. That has included visiting red and rural counties that previously voted for Trump and joint campaign events with Republicans, casting her candidacy as “country over party.”

Planning for such an event is still underway, but would likely include a Republican moderator, according to the source.

CNN reached out to the Harris campaign and Cheney’s team for comment.

Some background: Earlier this month, Cheney and Harris appeared together at a campaign rally in Ripon, Wisconsin, the birthplace of the Republican party, where the vice president made a direct appeal to Republican and independent voters. Cheney said then she was “proudly” casting her vote for Harris, invoking the events of January 6, 2021.

Cheney’s opposition to Trump and his efforts to overturn the 2020 election — including her vote to impeach him — eventually led the House GOP to oust her as conference chair and replace her with a top Trump ally, New York Rep. Elise Stefanik. Cheney went on to serve as vice chair of the House select committee that investigated the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol.

Harris draws contrast with Trump’s record with manufacturing and auto industries

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks during a campaign event at Riverside Park in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on October 18.

Vice President Kamala Harris on Friday attacked Donald Trump’s track record on the auto industry as she tried to appeal to Michigan voters in Grand Rapids on Friday.

During her remarks, Harris pledged to invest in manufacturing communities and work with union workers as she drew contrast with the former president. She attacked the former president’s history with the manufacturing and auto industries and argued Trump “makes big promises and he always fails to deliver.”

If she is president, Harris promised that she would “invest in the industries that built America, like steel, iron and the great American auto industry, and we will ensure that the next generation of breakthroughs, from advanced batteries to electric vehicles are not just invented, but built right here in America by American union workers.”

“Thousands of Michigan auto workers lost their jobs, and Donald Trump’s running mate recently suggested that if they win, they would threaten the Grand River assembly plant in Lansing,” Harris told the crowd. “The same plant our administration protected earlier this year, saving 650 union jobs.”

She also continued to criticize Trump for “ducking debates” and “canceling interviews” as she questioned his fitness to be the next commander-in-chief.

The vice president was referring to a recent report from Politico which quoted anonymous sources saying that Trump has backed out of negotiations for recent interviews citing exhaustion.

Walz talks coaching football in pitch for unity and "basic freedoms"

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz reminisced on his high school football coaching days and his recent football-related campaign stops on “The Rich Eisen Show” on Friday before making the case for Vice President Kamala Harris.

The Democratic vice presidential candidate also talked about how he was the defensive coordinator who helped lead the Mankato West High School team to the 1999 Minnesota Class-AAAA football state championship and shared a story of coaching the Congressional Football Game when he first entered Congress in 2007

At the end of the interview, Walz was asked what is “at stake” in November’s presidential election. He said he believes “basic freedoms” are in play and projected a politics of unity while tying his vision into the sense of community he said becomes apparent while following sports.

“I think you can disagree on policy a little bit, but the fundamentals, whether it’s democracy or it’s the you know, those personal choices, I think that’s what’s on” the ballot, Walz said.

Trump says Netanyahu called him following Sinwar’s death, but they haven't spoke yet

In Trump’s first public reaction to Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar’s death, former President Donald Trump said Sinwar was “not a good person” and that he was “glad” that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “decided to do what he had to do.”

“My reaction is he was not a good person, that’s my reaction. That’s sometimes what happens,” Trump told reporters after landing in Detroit, Michigan.

Trump was later asked whether he thought Sinwar’s death makes “peace easier or harder.”

“I think it makes it easier,” Trump said.

Trump said Netanyahu had called him following Sinwar’s death, but that he hadn’t spoken to him yet.

Trump was asked what he was going to tell Netanyahu and Trump said, “Well, look, he’s doing a good job. Biden is trying to hold him back. Just so you understand, Biden is far superior to the VP.”

“He’s trying to hold him back, and he probably should be doing the opposite,” Trump said.

Trump bashes Jack Smith after new redacted documents released in 2020 election subversion case

Special Counsel Jack Smith and former President Donald Trump.

Former President Donald Trump bashed special counsel Jack Smith after Smith on Friday released nearly 2,000 heavily redacted pages of documents in his 2020 election subversion case against Trump.

The documents revealed snippets of the evidence Smith relied on to charge the former president.

On the tarmac at a Detroit airport, Trump called Smith a “deranged lunatic” and said he “lost Florida,” in reference to the classified documents case that Smith brought against Trump that was later dismissed by a federal judge.

More context: Trump has repeatedly claimed this year that “all” of the legal cases against him, including local and state cases, were all orchestrated by President Joe Biden for the purpose of “election interference,” to help Democrats win the election.

In July, when Biden dropped out of the race and Kamala Harris became the Democratic candidate, Trump began claiming she was the one behind the cases.

As CNN’s Fact Check team has reported, there is no evidence that Biden personally orchestrated any of these cases. Trump never presented any evidence for that claim, let alone for suddenly making the vice president the target of the claim after months of directing it at the president.

Smith was appointed by Attorney General Merrick Garland, a Biden appointee, but that is far from proof that Biden orchestrated the prosecutions – and certainly not proof that Harris did. Garland has said he would resign if Biden ever asked him to take action against Trump, but expressed confidence that Biden would never put him in that position.

You can read more about the case and the released documents here.

CNN’s Marshall Cohen and Daniel Dale contributed reporting to this post.